Tim Chavez writes this about Bredesen’s proposed cuts of TennCare.
One cannot begin to fathom the heartache and stress from such an upheaval, and I can write from personal experience tied to my ongoing battle with leukemia and the devastating impact upon my family and its finances. Much to our shame, we’ve been forced to file for financial assistance with Vanderbilt University Medical Center for our bills tied to my leukemia and related maladies like diabetes and broken bones from a quadruple drop in my bone density. While chemo can save a life for the moment, it can also devastate other parts of the body.
So far, I’ve broken both my arms at the elbow and my left collarbone. Unbeknownst to my wife, I let a broken bone in my hand go untreated because of the cost of visiting a orthopedic specialist, $40, and accompanying X-rays. The broken bone was not out of line, so the pain was all that I had to endure.
I don’t write this to elicit any sympathy but to show how much every dollar means to families crushed under medical expenses. Household finance fortunes can reverse so quickly. And the stress from not knowing how you’re going to pay your bills, keep your home and educate your children is worse than the most nauseous chemo reaction or piercing bone pain.
People will say that folks like us could just sell our homes to pay bills. But two houses on our street have been for sale for a year now. The subprime mortgage mess has screwed up the real estate market.
Bredesen doesn’t like TennCare. His business background is in making money off health care, not primarily helping those in need. He promised to fix TennCare when he ran for office. Then he gutted it when he got into office. And in keeping with his bizarre view of value in the world, he proposes in his budget to keep $100 million in an economic development fund while cutting TennCare.
Chavez used to write for the Tennessean.
What he’s saying people are going through every single day in this country.